He's having a hard time in his later years in adjusting to the karma he fears is just around the corner, waiting for him. He's tried to manipulate events, and failed, as this article illustrates:
Genocide trial shines spotlight on 'dirty war'
Ben Sills in Madrid
Saturday January 15, 2005
The Guardian
A former Argentinian army officer, accused of throwing political prisoners to their death from military planes, appeared in a Spanish court yesterday in the country's first-ever genocide trial.
Adolfo Scilingo, 58, who is facing charges relating to his role in Argentina's dirty war when thousands of left-wing activists disappeared, had to be helped into the dock of Madrid's high court after hunger strike had left him severely weakened.
(snip)
Yesterday Jaime Sanz de Bremond, a prosecution lawyer representing the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, a victims' group, said: "It was an ideological extermination. The military junta planned to suppress all those opposed to their western, Christian model."
(snip)
Once a week 15 or 20 prisoners from the school were drugged, flown out over the ocean and then pushed to their deaths.
(snip)
Roberto Libedinsky's daughter Susana disappeared during the war. "I can't tell you what happened to her," he said. "Eleven soldiers came and took her in the middle of the night like Nazis. They said they had to investigate her."
"She was opposed to the regime," he added. "But she never took up arms."
(snip)
"They were unconscious," he said. "We took their clothes off and when the commander of the flight gave the order we opened the door and pushed them out, naked, one by one."
After the book came out Mr Scilingo suffered harassment in Argentina, including letter bombs and threats. So in 1997 he brought his story to Spain.
His initial testimony matched the account in the book. But after he was remanded in Madrid's Carabanchel prison, Mr Scilingo's story changed. "He thought he was going to nail his superiors," said one observer. "Then he realised he was going to get nailed himself."
(snip/...)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/spain/article/0,2763,1390877,00.htmlAping one of his spiritual brethren, Augusto Pinochet, this one has gone on a hunger strike, and is hamming it up in his trial, trying to suggest he's close to the verge of death itself.
"His attitude is entirely voluntary," said the doctor. "He knows what he is doing."
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~Married to the Man Who Talked
First Page - by Joe Goldman - Buenos Aires - 16 March 1997
They are, in so many ways, the typical Argentine middle-class family.
Paz, 22, is studying interior design in a private school.
Pilar, 21, works part-time in advertising.
Asunción, 18, wants to be an actress.
Manuel, 16, dreams of living in the United States.
Their mother Marcela, 47, is co-owner of a small company which sells and distributes videocassettes with religious themes.
But their lives changed drastically in March 1995 when the head of the family, Adolfo Scilingo, became the first Argentine military officer to blow the whistle on the scores of death flights undertaken in the years 1976/1983. Scilingo, a Navy Captain during the so-called Dirty War, admitted he was on two flights where 30 prisoners were drugged, undressed and hurled off the plane into the waters of the South Atlantic.
(snip)
“I’m really proud that he admitted the death flights, because we could see it was ruining him,” said daughter Asunción, who remembers her father’s tremendous bouts with alcoholism and how he sat at the dinner table without saying a word to anybody. “We gradually learned what the problem was as our mother began telling us about the situation.”
(snip)
“When we first began discussing what he went through, he gave very few details but over the years he talked about witnessing young prisoners, even pregnant women, in chains in cells not fit for animals. Then came the details about the flight, the descriptions of all the people who were drugged and thrown from the plane. It was a shock for all of us.”
(snip)
http://ukinet.com/media/text/scilingo.htm~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~How many Americans are unaware that Argentinian officers took the babies of accused "leftists" prisoners after they were born in prison, and distributed them to the families of other officers and their friends? How many Americans don't know that there are people in Argentina trying to find out where their tiny relatives were sent, or if they were also destroyed with the mothers?
Younger Sciling during his "glory days"